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© Pocket Essentials 2007


Andrei Tarkovsky

the pocket essential guide
Sean Martin

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ISBN13: 978-1-904048-49-7
extent: 256pp
binding: paperback
price £6.99
pub. date February 2006

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press release

featuring:

Ivan’s Childhood
Andrei Rublev
Solaris
Mirror
Stalker
Nostalgia
The Sacrifice
Tempo di Viaggio
The Killers
There Will Be No Leave Today
The Steamroller and the Violin
Hamlet
Boris Godunov
and more...

Andrei Tarkovsky is the most celebrated Russian filmmaker since Eisenstein, and one of the most important directors to have emerged during the 1960s and 70s.

Although he made only seven features, each one was a major landmark in cinema, the most well-known of them being the mediaeval epic Andrei Rublev – widely regarded as one of the greatest films of all time – and the autobiographical Mirror, set during the Russia of Stalin’s purges in the 1930s and the years of stagnation under Brezhnev. Both films landed Tarkovsky in considerable trouble with the authorities, and he gained a reputation for being a tortured – and ultimately martyred – filmmaker. Despite the harshness of the conditions under which he worked, Tarkovsky built up a remarkable body of work.

He burst upon the international scene in 1962 with his debut feature Ivan’s Childhood, which won the Golden Lion at Venice and immediately established him as a major filmmaker. During the 1970s, he made two classic ventures into science-fiction, Solaris, regarded at the time as being the Soviet reply to Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and later remade by Steven Soderbergh, and Stalker, which was thought to have predicted the Chernobyl disaster. Harassed at home, Tarkovsky went into exile and made his last two films in the West, where he also published his classic work of film and artistic theory, Sculpting in Time. Since his death in Paris in 1986, his reputation continued – and continues – to grow.

In this book, Sean Martin considers the whole of Tarkovsky’s oeuvre, from the classic student film The Steamroller and the Violin, across the full-length films, to the later stage works and Tarkovsky’s writings, paintings and photographs. Martin also seeks to demystify Tarkovsky as a ‘difficult’ director, whilst also celebrating his radical aesthetic of long takes and tracking shots, which Tarkovsky was to dub ‘imprinted’ or ‘sculpted’ time, and to make a case for Tarkovsky’s position not just as an important filmmaker, but also as an artist who speaks directly about the most important spiritual issues of our time.

The people at the premier Tarkovsky website, nostalghia.com have good things to say about Sean Martin's new book: "a staggering wealth of information on all things Tarkovsky...Mr. Martin has really nailed it with this book, and no Tarkovsky collection is complete without it. ".
Check out the full story >>

'[Sean Martin's] Tarkovsky book is outstanding' - Ron Holloway, Kino Magazine

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